First published in 1867, Capital, or Das Kapital, is the infamous treatise on economics and capitalism by Prussian revolutionary KARL MARX (1818-1883), who changed history with his 1848 book The Communist Manifesto. In this work, edited by Marx's friend, German philosopher FRIEDRICH ENGELS (1820-1895), Marx systematically analyzes the way the capitalist machine functions. In this academic work written for students and serious thinkers, he explores wages, competition, banking, rent, and the natural laws that seem to govern the development of capitalism without any oversight by the society in which it developed. Originally published in three volumes, Capital is here presented in five volumes. Volume III, Part 1 covers: . The Conversion of Surplus-Value into Profit and of the Rate of Surplus-Value into the Rate of Profit . Conversion of Profit into Average Profit . The Law of the Falling Tendency of the Rate of Profit . Transformation of Commodity-Capital and Money-Capital Into Commercial Capital and Financial Capital . Division of Profit Into Interest and Profits of Enterprise
Revision of: Healthcare executive's guide to allocating capital. c2007.
Economic Growth: IX RE American English Reprint
Crisis in Keynesian economics from a Hicksian perspective
Capital and Growth
本书包括新社会;城市;爱情的世俗化;奢侈的发展;资本主义——奢侈的产物等内容。
Sitting on Gold Mines
Karl Marx, Frederick Engels: Marx, 1857-61
Dès lors que le taux de rendement du capital dépasse durablement le taux de croissance de la production et du revenu - ce qui était le cas jusqu'au XIXe siècle, et risque fort de redevenir la norme au XXIe siècle -, alors le ...
With the former representative democracy hijacked by these moneyed interests, this book demonstrates that it remains quintessentially American to believe that there is always a way out, and that the encroaching acts of fascism by "elites" ...
This volume of essays builds upon renewed interest in the long-run global development of wealth and inequality stimulated by the publication of Thomas Piketty's Capital in the Twenty-First Century.